Shear Wave Splitting Underneath Northwest Canada and Eastern Alaska from Transportable Array and Mackenzie Mountains Data
Abstract
Shear wave splitting results from the Northern Cordillera and surroundings will be presented. This complex tectonic setting contains a subduction zone responding to the Yakutat Indenter, an oceanic plateau fragment, a slab window under the Yukon Territory, and the actively uplifting Mackenzie Mountains. A particular goal of this project is to understand whether asthenospheric tractions play a significant role in Mackenzie Mountain uplift. Using a new method for calculating station-averaged splitting parameters, we have analyzed stations that span a large part of the region and therefore can see the variation in splitting parameters from the dynamic NA-PA subduction zone to the stable Slave Craton. Like other shear wave splitting studies in the Northern Cordillera, we find abrupt changes in fast axis direction along the continental margin, while the continental interior displays more coherent splitting parameters. This study is also the first to look at data from a recent deployment through center of the Mackenzie Mountains. Northeast of the Tintina Fault, we find average fast axes directions that are very close to the absolute NA plate motion but our large deviations from event to event suggest that there is some crustal anisotropy and/or dipping structure present. This observation appears to support the idea of a lower crustal décollement that has been put forth by Mazzoti and Hyndman [2002]. These results serve as a broad regional overview of mantle anisotropy and may also shed light on frozen lithospheric deformation.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017AGUFM.S43D0897S
- Keywords:
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- 7205 Continental crust;
- SEISMOLOGY;
- 8025 Mesoscopic fabrics;
- STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY;
- 8030 Microstructures;
- STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY;
- 8110 Continental tectonics: general;
- TECTONOPHYSICS